Happy Birthday to One of the Greatest Astrologers in History - Grant Lewi

by Robert Wilkinson

Today we celebrate the 106th birthday of one of the greatest astrologers in history, the legendary Grant Lewi. As I wrote in another article, he pioneered a new approach to analyzing birth charts, signs, planets, and transits. A Professor at Dartmouth, he left academia to pursue a brilliant career as author, publisher, and one of the greatest lights of 20th Century astrology. He died a legend, having predicted his exact time of death before it happened as a result of a cerebral hemorrhage." Today we give a happy to an amazing man for the ages.

Rather than try to top what I've already written in the past, why don't you revisit what I wrote last year, since it connects to past articles on his life, his accomplishments, and book reviews on his masterworks, "Heaven Knows What" and "Astrology for the Millions." Written in 1935 and 1940, they are still the benchmarks for anyone wanting to learn about astrology, transits, planets in signs, and planets in aspect.

Though much has changed since Grant walked this Earth, he is the giant in whose footsteps we all follow, since he gave us an entirely different way of looking at the natal chart. As I wrote in an earlier article,

Perhaps Grant Lewi’s greatest contribution to modern astrology was his pioneering explanation of transits in general, and specifically the Saturn return. He was the first astrologer to take it out of the realm of superstition into a view where we could use this time, as well as any difficult transit period, more productively.

Before Grant Lewi, the Saturn Return was seen to be a time of fated doom, gloom, and difficulties. Grant pointed out that during the Saturn return it is imperative for us to use our free will and self-discipline to reject obsolete duties and limitations while embracing a new way to live on our own terms.

He may well have been the first “psychological astrologer,” since he believed in free will to the utmost, and offered radically different ways to understand the birth chart than the mechanistic, deterministic models in vogue up to that point in time. His pioneering work, “Astrology for the Millions,” first published in 1940, was the first time in print we were told that during the Saturn Return we are revising deeply what we can live with and what we cannot, and learn to clear our inner nature of the deadwood of obsolete complexes and sentimentalities.

He emphasized that the Saturn return is one of those times in life when free will works to liberate us of a lot of subconscious refuse, and that nothing that happens to us is as important as our response to it. He admonished us not to “lay the blame at the door of circumstances.” Sounds like free will in dynamic action to me.

Happy birthday, Grant. I loved hanging with Carl while he was here, and I'm sure the two of you are having a blast with the other Astrological greats in whatever frequency of Heaven you're celebrating. Thanks for everything you've given me, since you've changed the lives of thousands of clients and friends over the years. Aum and blessings to you, my Brother and teacher.

Comments

He was a professor at Dartmouth? I wish there were professors like him (and I had some GREAT ones) when I attended. This may be worth a trip to Hanover to investigate the College's archives. When did he teach there?